Alcohol and Drowning—The Geelong Experience, 1957–1980

1981 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 266-272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vernon D. Plueckhahn

The resident population in the Geelong coronial district is approximately 250 000 persons and has almost doubled since 1957. The autopsy rate for all persons dying by accident is virtually 100 per cent, with specimens being taken for blood alcohol concentration on all such deaths. The ‘Geelong Experience’ concerning alcohol and drowning is based on the post-mortem findings and the history of the events which surrounded 238 fatal submersions during the 24-year period, 1957 to 1980. Males greatly predominated over females and 139 drownings occurred in males aged 15 years and older. No female had an autopsy blood alcohol concentration (BAC) greater than 0.08 per cent (18 mmol/L) whereas such concentrations were present at autopsy in 35 per cent of all drowned males aged 15 years and older. Of the deceased males in the 30 to 64 years age group, 45 per cent of those submersed while swimming or surfing and 75 per cent of those falling or slipping into water had autopsy BACs greater than 0.150 per cent (33 mmol/L). Of these latter males, 8 (that is, 33 per cent) had autopsy BACs greater than 0.25 per cent (55 mmol/L).

1989 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. K. Heatley ◽  
J. Crane

The relationship between the blood alcohol concentration and the urine alcohol concentration was studied in 109 routine coroner's autopsies. Although the average ratio for urine alcohol concentration to blood alcohol concentration lay close to the ratio of 4:3 quoted in the literature, the actual ratios determined were widely scattered around this value. Thus the use of this simple ratio to estimate the blood alcohol concentration from the urine alcohol concentration at post-mortem was unreliable. An equation determined by employing linear regression analysis was similarly unhelpful in enabling one to derive a precise value for the blood alcohol concentration from a given urine alcohol concentration. It was concluded that the main value in determining the urine alcohol concentration at autopsy was to exclude the possibility of the alcohol present in the blood sample having been generated during the post-mortem interval.


1979 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 186-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Chandra ◽  
T. D. Dogra ◽  
P. C. Dikshit

The present study was undertaken in the Department of Forensic Medicine of the AH India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, with the object of studying various aspects of cranio-intracranial injuries in roadside vehicular accident cases. Out of a total of 3227 medicolegal post-mortem examinations conducted, the number of accidental deaths was 2279 (70·62 per cent). Vehicular accidents (1132) comprised 49·76 per cent of the total fatal accidents and 35·5 per cent of the total post-mortems. The incidence of males involved in accidents was 71·74 per cent which was about five times more than females (15·01 per cent). Children below 12 years comprised 13·25 per cent of vehicular accident victims. The most common victim involved was the pedestrian comprising 50·7 per cent, followed by the motorcyclist (18·28 percent). The commonest age group involved in fatal vehicular accidents was between 21–40 years (521 cases, 46·01 per cent). Persons between the age group 11–20 years accounted for 13·69 per cent. Trucks were responsible for accidents in 28·09 per cent of cases, buses in 17·14 per cent and cars in 22·99 per cent; these have been found to be the most common types of vehicles causing fatal accidents. Most of the victims died on the spot (36·30 per cent). A total of 72·5 per cent of the victims died within 24 hours. All victims survived up to a maximum of only 2 weeks, except one case who survived 29 days and died of pyogenic meningitis. Head injuries were responsible for causing death in 71·99 per cent of cases. Chest injuries caused death in 6·18 per cent of cases and abdominal injuries proved fatal in 7·06 per cent of cases. Death by injury to other regions occurred in 15·54 per cent of cases. The incidence of cranio-intracranial injuries was highest in cyclists (78·93 per cent), followed by motorcyclists (72–46 per cent) and pedestrians (66·02 per cent). The number of car occupants involved in fatal accidents was 65·3 per cent. Fracture of the skull was observed in 79·87 per cent of cases; the most common bone involved was the temporal bone (58·67 per cent), followed by the occipital bone (57·75 per cent). Fractures of parietal and frontal bone were almost equal, being 50·38 per cent and 49·37 per cent respectively. The commonest variety of intracranial haemorrhage was subarachnoid haemorrhage (66·9 per cent), followed by subdural haemorrhage (58·2 per cent) and extradural haemorrhage (14·2 per cent). Extradural haemorrhage was least common (14·2 per cent). Intracerebral haemorrhage was found in 22·5 per cent of cases and brain stem haemorrhage in 10·81 per cent. The incidences of contusion and laceration of the brain were almost equal, being 23·6 per cent and 24·8 per cent respectively. Fracture of the ribs was the commonest chest injury, with contusion and laceration of the lung in 18·6 per cent of cases. Laceration of the liver was commonly found in abdominal injury in 17·2 per cent of cases. These findings have been compared with other authors. An attempt was also made in the present study to correlate the post-mortem findings and the survival time in relation to those victims who gave a history of consciousness after the accident and those where there was no history of consciousness. For convenience sake, the post-mortem lesions were divided in grades as 0, I, II, IIa, III and IIIa. The maximum number of fatal cases (46·2 per cent) belonged to grade III (fractured skull, intracranial haemorrhage and brain lesion) followed by grade II (35·1 per cent) (fracture skull and intracranial haemorrhage). No relationship was established between the post-mortem findings, the survival time and the state of consciousness or un-consciousness. The grade II and grade III lesions were common in both conscious and unconscious patients. The commonest complication observed in head injury cases was bronchopneumonia.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (27) ◽  
pp. 2462-2466
Author(s):  
Paresh Sodhiya ◽  
Khushal Rao Hurmade ◽  
Sanjay Mahajan ◽  
Gajendra Dandotiya ◽  
Manisankar Das ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND The number of trauma cases is increasing day by day in our setup. Daily 10-15 patients of trauma came to MYH, we found that among these patients many patients have under the influence of alcohol. Alcohol consumption is the leading cause of trauma and reason for visitation to emergency department. We wanted to prospectively study the incidence of alcoholism in victims of trauma admitted in Dept of surgery, MYH Indore and correlate the severity of trauma in relation to blood alcohol concentration. METHODS This cross sectional study conducted at Maharaja Yashwant Rao Hospital from January 2019 to march 2020 and it includes all patients 16 years and above with traumatic injury admitted in Department of Surgery. Breath analyzer test will be done on all patients and levels will be documented. RESULTS In our study head injury (73.6 %) was the most common type of injury in which breath analyzer testing was found positive in 82 %,followed by burn (12.7 %) in which breath analyzer testing was found positive in 2.1 %, followed by poly trauma (4 %) in which breath analyzer testing was found positive in 4.3 %, followed by blunt trauma chest (2.4 %) in which breath testing was found positive in 2.7 %, followed by limbs (0.7 %) in which breath analyzer testing was found positive in 0.9 %. CONCLUSIONS In our study we have found that out of total 3105 patients history of alcoholism is present in 1420 patients while breath alcohol analyzing test positive in 2072 patients and there is significance relationship between trauma and history of alcoholism with the p value of <0.0001. We also found that significant relationship between trauma and breath alcohol analyzing testing with the p value of <0.0001. KEYWORDS Glasgow Coma Scale, Blood Alcohol Concentration, Road Traffic Accidents, Emergency Department, Breath Analyzer


2014 ◽  
pp. 161-171
Author(s):  
Nada Bosnjakovic-Pavlovic ◽  
Marijana Stefanovic ◽  
Slobodan Anic ◽  
Borivoj Adnadjevic ◽  
Mihajlo Jelicic ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 69 (9) ◽  
pp. 2407-2410
Author(s):  
Dan Perju Dumbrava ◽  
Carmen Corina Radu ◽  
Sofia David ◽  
Tatiana Iov ◽  
Catalin Jan Iov ◽  
...  

Considering the growing number of requests from the criminal investigations authorities addressed to the institutions of legal medicine, testing of blood alcohol concentration both in the living person and in the corpse, we believe that a presentation of the two methods which are used in our country, is a topic of interest at present. The purpose of this article is to provide the reader with the technical details on how blodd alcohol concentration is realised by means of the gas chromatographic method and the classical one, (Cordebard modified by D. Banciu and I. Droc) respectively. Another purpose of this article is to also show, in a comparative way, the elements that make the gas chromatographic method superior to the former one.


Author(s):  
R. Wade Allen ◽  
Zareh Parseghian ◽  
Anthony C. Stein

There is a large body of research that documents the impairing effect of alcohol on driving behavior and performance. Some of the most significant alcohol influence seems to occur in divided attention situations when the driver must simultaneously attend to several aspects of the driving task. This paper describes a driving simulator study of the effect of a low alcohol dose, .055 BAC (blood alcohol concentration %/wt), on divided attention performance. The simulation was mechanized on a PC and presented visual and auditory feedback in a truck cab surround. Subjects were required to control speed and steering on a rural two lane road while attending to a peripheral secondary task. The subject population was composed of 33 heavy equipment operators who were tested during both placebo and drinking sessions. Multivariate Analysis of Variance showed a significant and practical alcohol effect on a range of variables in the divided attention driving task.


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